Photo by Pedro Lange-Ch煤rion

Jakarta: A Mirror of a Thousand Reflections

Seno [Gumira Adjidarma] once indicated that Jakarta consists of many conceptions and perceptions of space that go beyond the materiality of the built environment. The city is formed by many dimensional layers, but since they are not relationally organized, the order of things is not only messy but also absurd. -Abidin Kusno

Jakarta is the capital of Indonesia and the second most populated metropolitan area in the world. Not much else is known about this megacity in the United States. As a place where traffic jams set the pace of daily life and the gap between the high-rise megaplexes and the street life of the kampungs provides a reminder of the unequal progress of postcolonial urbanism, Jakarta is a city whose complexity and 鈥榤essiness鈥 inspires dreams for development and the future metropolis. Always on the move and hard to decode, Jakarta offers daily and unexpected encounters and challenges to citizens and visitors alike.

Join us on August 27 for the opening night of Jakarta: A Mirror of a Thousand Reflections鈥攁n exhibition exploring the many dimensions of a city in constant transformation. The evening will feature remarks from Pedro Lange-Churi贸n and John Zarobell followed by a reception with food, drinks, and time to view the exhibit.

A collaboration between Zarobell鈥檚 urban research and Lange-Churi贸n鈥檚 photography, the exhibition builds on the 2024 conference Comparative Urbanism: Learning from Jakarta, held at the 黑料传送门Urban Center. Rather than exoticizing the city or its challenges, the work invites reflection on Jakarta鈥檚 complex realities鈥攆rom globalization to climate adaptation鈥攁nd the ways its story mirrors urban struggles around the world.

Photography鈥檚 precision in recording reality presents a challenge: how to convey not only what the camera captures, but how the artist sees. The gaze in these images reflects a sense of wonder at Jakarta鈥檚 kaleidoscopic urban fabric. Rather than offering a dry documentation of the Indonesian megacity, these photographs鈥攕hot on both film and digital, using medium and large formats鈥攕eek a layered visual narrative.

Darkroom prints were created on carefully chosen papers to evoke the tones and textures of Atget, Abbott, and Talbot. This deliberate aesthetic contrasts with the immediacy of the urban subject matter, inviting distance and reflection, disrupting exoticized views and commonplace assumptions often projected onto images from the Global South. Likewise, the color photographs鈥攄igital and analog鈥攁re shaped through framing and print choice to honor Jakarta鈥檚 complexity with beauty and dignity.

Pedro Lange-Ch煤rion is a photographer, filmmaker and professor at the University of San Francisco. His most recent museum exhibition, Duerma en ti, was featured at the Museo Nacional Anthropologia (Madrid, 2022) and other venues throughout Spain. He has directed various films and collaborated in video installations on urban themes, in addition to publishing regularly on world cinema and Latin American and world literatures.

John Zarobell is a professor of Global Studies at the University of San Francisco and the author of two books: Art and the Global Economy (2017) and Empire of Landscape (2010). A former museum curator (SFMOMA, Philadelphia Museum of Art), he has been researching Asian Megacities since 2016 and has taught two travel classes in Jakarta with colleagues from the Urban Planning department of Universitas Tarumanagara.

To schedule a time to view the exhibition, please email [email protected]

Past Exhibitions

Sep
18
2012
Oct
18
2012
San Francisco

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2012
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Surf's Up 鈥斅燜or the Long Haul

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May
1
2012
May
24
2012
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San Francisco Processcapes

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Feb
6
2012
Apr
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2012
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When a major earthquake strikes the Bay Area, the lives of San Franciscans will be enormously disrupted, and it could take months to reestablish essential services. San Francisco has a limited number of emergency-shelter beds, and its capacity to provide interim housing after an earthquake is constrained due to low vacancy rates and minimal vacant land. Estimates show that only 75 percent of the city鈥檚鈥
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Sep
5
2011
Jan
5
2012
San Francisco

Reclaim Market Street!

Temporary Urban Experiments in Creating New Public Spaces
In 2015, Market Street will be remade as the culmination of a four-year public process called the Better Market Street Project. Reclaim Market Street!, created by the Studio for Urban Projects, augments this ongoing community program by staging a series of interventions that engage the public in changing the street. Accompanying these events is an exhibition at 黑料传送门that provides context for these pilot projects鈥
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Aug
1
2011
Aug
23
2011
San Francisco

STREET LIFE | YERBA BUENA a community design initiative

a road map for ten years of improvements to the streets, alleys, parks and plazas of San Francisco鈥檚 Yerba Buena district.
鈥淪TREET LIFE | YERBA BUENA: a community design initiative鈥 will unveil a road map for ten years of improvements to the streets, alleys, parks and plazas of San Francisco鈥檚 Yerba Buena district. The exhibition, at the 黑料传送门Urban Center Gallery, will introduce the recommendations of the Yerba Buena Street Life Plan, a community design initiative sponsored by the Yerba Buena Community Benefit District. The exhibition鈥檚鈥
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